Yesterday, Health & Human Services retracted a suggestion by Sec. @XavierBecerra that Biden Admin. supports "safe injection sites" to use meth, heroin, & fentanyl
The reason for the confusion is because Biden Admin has no vision for reversing America's drug death crisis
The following is a joint statement by @calif_peace, a formal coalition of parents of homeless children addicted to illicit drugs, parents of children killed by fentanyl, recovering addicts, homeless service providers, & community leaders
America urgently needs a serious and comprehensive strategy to halt and reverse the rise in illicit drug deaths, from 17,000 in 2000 to 99,000 in the twelve months preceding March 2021, and yet the Biden administration has still not offered one.
Instead, it has announced piecemeal measures that alone and together are grossly insufficient. We call on President Joe Biden to address the nation directly and immediately on what his administration’s plan is to address the crisis.
Allowing cities to create “safe injection sites” for heroin, meth, and fentanyl drug users is an incomplete fix. These sites have only been shown to work in countries which also employ a suite of police and health care interventions for their chronic drug use population.
The evidence that drug injection sites could reduce deaths in the present U.S. context is largely confined to one observational study, at one unsanctioned site in an undisclosed U.S. city, and the authors warn that their findings cannot be generalized.
If implemented in a vacuum, without a role for expanded law enforcement & psychiatric care, the proposal advocated by @HarmReduction & @DrugPolicyOrg will leave the thousands of users it intends to serve without lasting treatment for addiction, and at the risk of death.
It is notable that Amsterdam, a city that has done one of the best jobs in the world in reducing drug deaths, drug dealing, and homelessness in a humane and efficient way, provides heroin and safe injection sites for fewer than 130 people.
And yet U.S.-based advocacy organizations as well as activist journalists routinely overplay the role of these sites in the drug policies of Netherlands, Portugal, and other European nations while omitting coverage of more broadly applicable and well-established strategies
Effective strategies include contingency management, where addicts are offered concrete rewards for abstinence like housing or cash, and the coordination of law enforcement and social services.
In truth, the small number of people allowed to use heroin in the Netherlands are people for whom all conventional approaches, including medically assisted therapy such as with Methadone or Suboxone, have failed.
In other words, heroin maintenance and drug injection sites are offered as a *last* resort as part of a comprehensive plan, not as first steps in dealing with the crisis, which is what some advocacy organizations are seeking in the United States.
Ten months into the Biden administration, it is high time that President Biden present a comprehensive plan to help cities and states shut down dangerous drug dealing, whether on street corners or on mobile apps like Snapchat; enforce laws and offer mandatory drug treatment...
... as an alternative to prison to addicts; and shut down the open drug scenes following the same strategy used by Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Lisbon, Vienna, and Zurich, which combined social services and law enforcement.
We stress that we are in favor of evidence-based harm reduction, including the distribution of clean needles to injection drug users. But, needle exchange is no substitute for ending drug dealing and providing drug treatment on demand...
... as well as mandatory treatment as an alternative to prison. When pursued to the exclusion of other drug policies, harm reduction alone cannot solve the drug deaths crisis.
We further urge the Biden administration to seek involvement of a broader group of experts and advocates than the handful of voices monomaniacally pursuing drug injection sites. Their advocacy is biased and distorted, involving manipulative and euphemistic language.
We do not know that drug injection sites would be “safe,” and yet that word has been built into the proposal, and repeated uncritically by HHS officials and reporters. What we do know is that the proposal has little to do with what has worked in Europe.
The role of the public policy-making process is central to the lives of every person in the U.S. The main purpose of the government is to have lawmakers set policy and then have government workers carry out those policies.
Unfortunately, the current drug policy set forth today ensures that our most vulnerable population will not only continue to live in despair, but also die on our streets. If we seek to rehabilitate those on our streets, our policy must reflect that.
As parents of homeless children addicted to illicit drugs, parents of children killed by fentanyl, recovering addicts, homeless service providers, and community leaders, we are dedicated to seeking effective, practical, and urgent action to stop and reverse the drug death crisis.
We have presented our ideas about what we need, based on what has worked in Europe, and in cities around the U.S. We look forward to an evidence-based engagement with HHS and the Biden administration more broadly over how to achieve a radical drop in drug deaths.
“Without a high bond and the threat of lengthy prison sentence, I would never have stopped using…now I have a Ph.D”
Recovery is heroic. It often requires being arrested.
It’s time for us to grow up and recognize that MANY addicts need to be arrested!
What a testament to the advocacy nature of so much “journalism” about drugs and “homelessness” that we rarely hear stories like the one above even though they are so common
This barbarism. Why do the progressives who run our cities allow it? Because they believe arresting him and mandating drug treatment is worse than letting him die on the sidewalk without dignity.
Yes, that is the actual reason. And yes, it is as stupid as it sounds.
The big lie is that San Francisco lets ~700 people/year die totally preventable drug deaths, including on the street, because it lacks the money to help them.
But SF spends over $100,000 per homeless person. That’s more than enough to pay for 90 days of court-ordered rehab
The official line from the people who are directly responsible for allowing 700+ of our fellow humans to die on sidewalks, rather than receive mandated treatment, is that “homelessness is caused by poverty, high rents & lack of housing.” They want us to believe our eyes are lying
After the Fukushima accident 10 years ago, nuclear energy was widely viewed as politically radioactive. Today, nuclear energy is coming back, around the world, in a big way. Why? By doing the opposite of what the anti-nuclear movement had done.
“Abandoning Nuclear Power Would Be Europe’s Biggest Climate Mistake,” screams Bloomberg today. “If Biden is serious about the climate crisis, he should put nuclear on the table,” said the LA Times Wednesday. “The Dream Is Possible,” tweeted French President Emmanuel Macron.
Viewed as politically radioactive just a decade ago, after the Fukushima accident, nuclear power is today coming back in a big way. The pro-nuclear movement is growing like gangbusters in even hostile nations like Belgium, Germany, and Australia.
People think "fire is bad" but it's not. Many forests need fires. The kind of fire matters. Many forests including California's famous Sierra Nevadas need "good" low-intensity fires to stay healthy and prevent "bad" low-intensity fires
Fires have declined by one-quarter globally since 1998, according to NASA, and the primary cause of California’s high-intensity fires is forest mismanagement, not warmer temperatures.
For the last half decade, renewable energy lobbyists have claimed that electricity from solar & wind is *already* cheaper than existing electricity. Now, Congress is about to give solar & wind industries another $238 billion in subsidies. Fascinating.
Many are blaming the post-covid economic boom for today's energy crisis, but the main cause of energy shortages, rising coal use, and higher emissions is the under-investment in oil & gas exploration driven by climate activism
Over the last decade, climate activists have successfully pressured governments, banks, and corporations to divest from oil and natural gas companies. At first such efforts appeared to be strictly symbolic.
But in recent years years climate activists succeeded in driving public and private investment away from oil and gas exploration and toward renewables. The result is the worst energy crisis in 50 years.